Roger Sherman (filmmaker)


Roger M. Sherman is an American filmmaker – a cinematographer, director, producer, still photographer, and author best known for his work in documentary cinema. He is a founder of Florentine Films. His most widely recognized documentaries are Alexander Calder, Richard Rogers: The Sweetest Sounds, Don't Divorce the Children, Medal of Honor, The Restaurateur, Zapruder and Stolley: Witness to an Assassination, his upcoming two-hour PBS special, The Search for Israeli Cuisine, The Rhythm of My Soul, and The American Brew. His films have won an Emmy Award, a Peabody Award, and two Academy Award nominations, among other honors.

Early life and education

Sherman was born at the Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New York City on June 26, 1951 to mother, Ray Morris Sherman and father, Lee Sherman. He is the second of three sons. Ray founded a day camp for learning disabled children in Westchester that she ran as a volunteer for over a decade, and Lee was in the women's all-weather coat business. He attended Hunter College Elementary school until age seven when his family moved to Scarsdale, New York.
Sherman graduated from Scarsdale High School in 1969. He attended Union College, majoring in political science and experimental education, played freshman soccer, and spent a semester in Bogotá, Colombia where he studied Spanish. He left Union and went to Denmark for his junior year abroad at The University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He studied architecture and history that fall and moved to :fr:Val-d'Isère|Val d'Isere, France, where he worked that winter at a hotel at the base of La Daille lift and a restaurant on top of the mountain. After returning from his year abroad, he attended Hampshire College, in Amherst, Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1975 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in film and photography.

Career

In 1976, a year after graduating from Hampshire, Sherman and college roommate, Ken Burns, along with another friend from Hampshire College, Buddy Squires, founded Florentine Films. They started by working as a New England crew for companies filming in the region. At the time when magazine shows were beginning to launch, the team worked for RAI/Italian television, the BBC, Danish television, French television, etc. and marketed themselves across New England. They were soon joined by their fourth partner, Lawrence Hott. They provide crew for documentaries for such films as Emily Dickinson and Herman Melville, shot a feature and worked on commercials. He began as a location sound recordist, then an assistant director and producer on commercials, producer/director on documentaries and also became a cinematographer.
In 1981, the company released its major film, The Brooklyn Bridge, directed by Ken Burns and produced by Burns, Sherman, and Buddy Squires. It was nominated for an Academy Award. A few films later, each of the four partners wanted to create work individually; they each launched separate brands under the same trade name, Florentine Films.
Of Sherman's many films, The Restaurateur, a portrait of renowned restaurant owner, Danny Meyer, won the 2013 James Beard Award for Best Documentary, Broadcast Journalism. His Emmy Award- and Peabody Award-winning film, Alexander Calder, is "an American masterpiece", said Charlie Rose. Richard Rogers: The Sweetest Sounds was declared, "An extraordinary film biography, perhaps the best ever produced in the American Masters series" by Dorothy Rabinowitz of The Wall Street Journal. Medal of Honor received appraisal from the New York Post, which reads, "An astounding array of stories about an unbelievable collection of unexpected heroes". His film, Don't Divorce the Children, about the effects of divorce on children, became a mandatory viewing in many states for families going through divorce.
Sherman has published his photography in Newsweek, Saveur, Town and Country, Town and Country Travel and Budget Travel magazines; he also photographed The Brisket Book by Stephanie Pierson. His own book, Ready, Steady, Shoot: The Guide to Great Home Video, was written to help individuals and families everywhere improve the content of their home videos. An update of that book, being sold as an enhanced eBook is called Ready, Steady, Shoot: A Pro's Guide to Smartphone Video, published by Florentine Films/Sherman Pictures, 2012.
In 2016 Florentine Films/Sherman Pictures released The Search for Israeli Cuisine, a portrait of the Israeli people - told through food. The chef/guide is well-known restaurant owner and chef, Mike Solomonov, the film is meant to capture the political culture of the country of Israel during its major culinary revolution. He takes viewers on a culinary adventure to over 100 locations throughout Israel, visiting top chefs, great home cooks, amazing wine and cheese makers, street food vendors, farmers, and much more. The film premiered at the Miami Jewish Film Festival and is currently playing at film festivals worldwide.

Personal life

Sherman lives in New York City with his wife, Dorothy Kalins, founding editor-in-chief of magazine, founding editor-in-chief of Saveur Magazine, executive editor of Newsweek Magazine. She is director of her company, Dorothy Kalins Ink, which she founded in 2006. They have a son, Lincoln Sherman; born February 21, 1993, a step-daughter, Sandrine Lago, married to Lewis Fowler, and a grandson, Lancaster Lago Fowler, born March 2, 2012.

Awards and honors

Sherman is a recipient of numerous awards, including two Academy Award nominations, an Emmy, and a Peabody.
His 2010 film, The Restaurateur is the winner of the 2013 James Beard Award, Best Food Documentary of the 2010 Sonoma International Film Festival, Best Documentary of the 2010 Big Apple Film Festival, and Best Documentary of the 2010 Double Feature Film Festival.

Filmography

Future Releases
Sherman has photographed for Town & Country Magazine, Saveur, Budget Travel, Garden Design, Metropolitan Home, and Newsweek. He photographed The Brisket Book: A Love Story with Recipes, by Stephanie Pierson,.